Integrating Gender into the World Bank s Work: A Strategy for Action

Transcription

1 Integrating Gender into the World Bank s Work: A Strategy for Action The World Bank January 2002

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3 Water and the Moon In South Africa, an estimated 16 million people have no operating water supply, with their source of water an average of 1 km away. If the average household is 5 persons, that makes 3.2 million households. If two trips to fetch water are made each day at a round-trip distance of, conservatively, 2 kms each, that makes a distance of 12.8 million km walked each day, day after day, by South African women, just to fetch water. If the average distance to the moon is 384,400 km, South African women walk a distance equivalent to the moon and back 16 times a day just to fetch water (or 319 times around the Earth s equator). If each trip takes an average of 1 hour to walk to the place, wait in a queue, collect the water, and walk back, 6.4 million trips take 6.4 million hours a day at 8 hours a day, 21 working days a month, 11 months a year, this represents nearly 3,500 working years each day fetching water. This is just South Africa. If you think of the rest of Africa, it is staggering and this for only about 10 litres of water each, which is usually of suspect quality. Source: iii

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5 Table of Contents Acronyms and Abbreviations viii Preface ix Executive Summary xi 1. The Business Case for Mainstreaming Gender The Empirical Links of Gender to Poverty and Growth Gender Equality and Growth Gender and Poverty Reduction Gender and Development Effectiveness Gender Disparities in Developing Countries Opportunities for Gender Mainstreaming in the Bank The Strategy The Basic Process Country Gender Assessment Dialogue and Action Projects Internal Actions to Facilitate the Basic Process Integrating the Gender Dimension into Relevant Analytical Work and Quality Assurance Supporting the Strategic Integration of Gender Issues into Operations Aligning Resources with Strategy Elements Monitoring and Evaluation Implementation Timetable v

6 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK 3. Toward a Framework for Prioritizing Gender Issues Gender Mainstreaming Toward a Framework Challenges to Gender Mainstreaming Adequacy of the Existing Policy Framework The Bank s Track Record The Bank s Comparative Advantage in Gender and Development How the Bank is Positioned vis-à-vis other Donors and Service Providers Partnerships Internal Bank Group Synergies: The International Finance Corporation Bibliography Annex Management Response to the Recommendations of the Operations Evaluation Department s Gender Reviews Boxes 1.1 The Definition of Gender The Millennium Development Declaration, the Beijing Platform for Action, and CEDAW World Bank Operational Policy 4.20: The Gender Dimension of Development The Country Gender Assessment Good Practice Example: Integration of Gender Analysis into a World Bank Country Assistance Strategy and Analytical Work Good Practice Examples: Gender Mainstreaming in Adjustment and Programmatic Lending VI

7 TABLE OF CONTENTS 3.1 Good Practice Example: A Crosscutting Approach to Gender Mainstreaming Links between Gender and Productivity: Gender and Agriculture in Zambia Key Questions for Assessing Gender-Related Obstacles to Development Evolution of the Bank s Attention to Gender and Development Issues Figure 5.1 World Bank Priorities Tables 2.1 Organizational Responsibilities for Gender Mainstreaming Implementation Timetable VII

8 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK Acronyms and Abbreviations CAS CDF CEDAW CGA FHH IBRD IDA IFC IMF I-PRSP JSA NGO OECD PRSP UN UNDP UNESCO UNICEF UNIFEM Country Assistance Strategy Comprehensive Development Framework Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women Country Gender Assessment Female-Headed Household International Bank for Reconstruction and Development International Development Association International Finance Corporation International Monetary Fund Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper Joint Staff Assessment (World Bank and IMF) Non-governmental Organization Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper United Nations United Nations Development Programme United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation United Nations Children s Fund United Nations Development Fund for Women VIII

9 Preface This volume presents a strategy for mainstreaming genderresponsive actions into the development assistance work of the World Bank. The strategy was approved by the Bank s senior management on April 13, 2001, was discussed by the Bank s Board of Executive Directors Committee on Development Effectiveness on May 9, 2001, and was endorsed by the full Board of Executive Directors on September 18, The strategy was developed in recognition of the desirability of finding more effective ways to integrate gender-responsive actions into the World Bank s development assistance. The Bank s Gender and Development Board (a Bank-wide body composed of representatives from the main operational units in the Bank) took the lead in developing the strategy and was the primary sounding board for drafts of the paper, which were written by a team headed by Karen Mason, Director of Gender and Development, that included Cecilia Valdivieso, Susan R. Razzaz, C. Mark Blackden, Lucia Fort and Helene Carlsson. Production of the printed version was enabled by Sarah Nedolast, Susan Giebel Suoninen, Deborah Davis, and Beni Chibber-Rao. Extensive consultations were held inside and outside the Bank as the strategy was being developed. The Bank s External Gender Consultative Group offered comments on several drafts; consultative workshops with government officials and members of civil society were ix

10 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK held in the six regions in which the Bank works; and informal consultations were held with many of the Bank s bilateral donor partners and representatives from UN agencies. The Bank is grateful to their partners in development for helping to make the strategy more responsive to the needs of women and men throughout the world. X

11 Executive Summary Several major World Bank reports provide strong empirical evidence that the gender-based division of labor and the inequalities to which it gives rise tend to slow development, economic growth, and poverty reduction. I Gender inequalities often lower the productivity of labor, in both the short term and the long term, and create inefficiencies in labor allocation in households and the general economy. They also contribute to poverty and reduce human well-being. These findings make clear that gender issues are an important dimension of the fight against poverty. Gender issues are also central to the commitments made by the World Bank s member countries at the United Nations Millennium Summit and at the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing in Although the nature and importance of gender issues for poverty reduction and growth vary from country to country, significant gender disparities are found in all regions of the world (including in the member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OECD). These disparities tend to be greater in low-income than in higher-income countries, and, within countries, tend to be greater among the poor than the more affluent. The incorporation of gender issues into development actions needs to be sensitive to the specific conditions in each country. I Engendering Development Through Gender Equality in Rights, Resources, and Voice, 2001a; World Development Report 2000/2001: Attacking Poverty, 2000d; and Voices of the Poor: Can Anyone Hear Us?, Narayan et al, xi

12 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK Since the 1980s, the Bank has made progress in integrating gender issues into country work and lending, particularly in education and health. For example, between 1995 and 2000 the Bank lent more than $3.4 billion for girls education programs, and was also the single largest lender in the world for health, nutrition, and population projects, three-quarters of which contained gender-responsive actions. Attention to gender issues in World Bank Country Assistance Strategies (CASs) also increased during this period. Several organizational changes designed to facilitate greater attention to gender and development issues were also made, including issuing an Operational Policy on the gender dimension of development in 1994, and creating a Gender and Development Board and placing it within the Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Network in Despite the progress to date in gender mainstreaming, the Bank s effectiveness can be improved by paying more systematic and widespread attention to gender issues in the context of its poverty reduction mandate. The opportunities for improving the development impact of the Bank s work through gender mainstreaming include making Bank interventions more responsive to country gender conditions and commitments; making these interventions more strategic; and improving the alignment of Bank policies, processes, and resources to support such interventions. In the strategy described in this paper, the World Bank will work with governments and civil society in client countries, and with other donors, to diagnose the gender-related barriers to and opportunities for poverty reduction and sustainable development; and will then identify and support appropriate actions to reduce these barriers and capitalize on the opportunities. The strategy is intended to establish an enabling environment that will foster country-led, country-specific strategies for changing the gender patterns that are costly to growth, poverty reduction, and human well-being. The strategy rests on a basic process that involves working with countries to: XII

13 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY prepare periodic, multi-sectoral Country Gender Assessments (CGAs) that analyze the gender dimensions of development across sectors and identify gender-responsive actions important for poverty reduction, economic growth, human well-being, and development effectiveness, and which inform the Bank s country assistance program; develop and implement, as part of the Bank s country assistance program, priority policy and operational interventions that respond to the assessment; and monitor the implementation and results of these policy and operational interventions. A key component of the strategy is the CGA, a country-level gender analysis that identifies critical areas in which gender-responsive actions are likely to enhance growth, poverty reduction, and well-being in a particular country context. Country Directors will ensure the completion of these assessments in a timely manner in countries with an active lending program (and in which an assessment has yet to be conducted). In line with the ongoing reform of the Bank s analytical work, the methods for carrying out these assessments will be flexible. The country gender analysis may, for example, be a stand-alone document or a section of a country poverty or economic analysis. The CGA may contain original, analytical work or may simply refer to such work produced by the Bank or by other agencies (government, international, academic). To lower costs, increase buy-in, and build on expertise outside the World Bank, collaboration with government, civil society, and other donors in completing the CGA will be emphasized when possible. Management, with the assistance of the Gender and Development Board, will clarify standards for conducting the assessments and monitoring their quality. Updates will be done in accordance with the typical cycle for country analytical work (approximately once every five years), and will be designed to investigate whether any major changes in gender XIII

14 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK conditions have occurred (i.e., updates will typically be less elaborate than the initial assessment). When possible, CGAs that contain substantial original work will be published and shared broadly. The gender strategy rests on four actions designed to enable the process of diagnosis, strategy formation, and integration into operations: Integrating a gender dimension into relevant analytical work and lending instruments. An understanding of gender issues in sectors identified in the diagnosis as important for poverty reduction and growth is a necessary prelude to gender-responsive project design. Tracking whether analytical work and projects in these sectors have been conducted with a cognizance of key gender issues is also important for improving performance and quality. For this reason, the strategy recommends integrating a gender dimension into: sectoral analytical work in high-priority sectors (as identified in the CGA), and into the social impact analysis associated with adjustment lending (including Poverty Reduction Support Credits); the criteria used to assess the poverty reduction focus of Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) in Joint Staff Assessments (JSAs); the criteria used to assess the adequacy of the poverty reduction focus of the CAS and Sector Strategy Papers; and the quality criteria used by the Quality Assurance Group to assess projects and analytical work, with appropriate consideration of whether particular sectors have been identified as high priority in the CGA. Supporting the strategic integration of gender issues into operations. The strategy recommends three forms of support for operations: XIV

15 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Training. To assist Bank staff and counterparts in strategically mainstreaming gender issues into operations, the Gender and Development Board will work with Human Resources and the World Bank Institute to add gender and development content to the Bank s staff orientation course and to existing core courses. Selected technical modules oriented to operational staff will also be developed. Operational tools. Together with regional sectoral staff, the Gender and Development Board will continue to create and disseminate adaptable tools and good practice examples for use in operations. Good practice examples, including those involving macroeconomic policy advice, will be emphasized. Building capacity in implementing agencies. The Gender and Development Board will explore methods to provide technical advice to implementing agencies. The Board will also work with the regions and the World Bank Institute to identify and support training opportunities for clients and counterparts. Aligning resources with the elements of the strategy. Four types of resources will be aligned with the strategy: Budget. In line with the decision to make gender mainstreaming one of the Bank s Corporate Advocacy Priorities, Bank budget is being redeployed to support gender analysis and mainstreaming. Accountabilities. The responsibilities of Bank staff for gender mainstreaming are being clarified (Table 2.1). Regional Vice Presidents will ultimately be accountable for regional results; they will in turn hold Country Directors and Sector Directors/ Managers accountable for ensuring appropriate integration of gender issues into country operations. To clarify policies and procedures, a revised Operational Policy and Bank Procedures XV

16 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK statement on gender and development will be issued after due consultation with external stakeholders and consideration by the Executive Board. While these consultations are ongoing, Management will issue an Operational Memorandum to clarify the existing gender policy and provide interim guidance on implementation. Staff. Regions will provide in-house technical expertise in gender and development to assist staff in gender analysis and strategic operational mainstreaming, especially during the initial years of implementation. Partnerships. Because of the valuable resources that other organizations have to offer and the potential synergies with Bank-led activities, the strategy also encourages the formation of country-level partnerships with governments, civil society, and other donors, especially in the context of particular projects or programs, including formulation of the PRSPs. Monitoring and evaluation. Finally, in order to track progress and enhance learning and quality, an effective system of monitoring and evaluation that includes assessment of on-the-ground results is under development. Progress in implementing the strategy will be reported annually. The estimated incremental costs of implementing the strategy will be about $2 million in the current fiscal year, about $3 million per year in the three subsequent years, and approximately $2.5 million per year thereafter. Corporate incentive funding of $0.6 million has been set side for the current year, and the regions have committed more than twice this amount as matching Bank budget. Implementation has thus been fully funded for the current fiscal year. XVI

17 Chapter 1 The Business Case for Mainstreaming Gender Gender equality is an issue of development effectiveness, not just a matter of political correctness or kindness to women. New evidence demonstrates that when women and men are relatively equal, economies tend to grow faster, the poor move more quickly out of poverty, and the well-being of men, women, and children is enhanced. This paper outlines a Bank-wide strategy for integrating gender concerns into the World Bank s work. The need for a new strategy arises both from the evidence that gender plays an important role in determining economic growth, poverty reduction, and development effectiveness, and from the less-than-systematic integration of gender concerns into the Bank s work to date. The strategy recommends that the World Bank work with governments and civil society in client countries, and with other donors, to diagnose the gender-related barriers to and opportunities for poverty reduction and sustainable development; and to then identify and support appropriate actions to reduce these barriers and capitalize on the opportunities. The overarching goal of the strategy is to reduce poverty by promoting inclusive development. From a 1

18 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK gender perspective, this means ensuring that both women and men have a voice in the development of their community and country, that both are able to benefit from the new opportunities that development brings, that both have access to the resources needed to be productive members of society, and that both share in a higher level of wellbeing. (See Box 1.1 for the definition of gender.) Greater attention to gender issues is also required by the commitment of the Bank and its member countries to the goals set forth in the United Nations Millennium Declaration, the Beijing Platform for Action, and the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), all of which have a strong gender dimension (Box 1.2). 1 This chapter describes the evidence linking gender to poverty reduction and economic growth evidence that provides the business case for integrating gender considerations into the work of the World Bank. We also identify the opportunities for achieving this Box 1.1 The Definition of Gender The term gender refers to culturally based expectations of the roles and behaviors of males and females. The term distinguishes the socially constructed from the biologically determined aspects of being male and female. Unlike the biology of sex, gender roles and behaviors can change historically, sometimes relatively quickly, even if aspects of these roles originated in the biological differences between the sexes. Because the religious or cultural traditions that define and justify the distinct roles and expected behaviors of males and females are strongly cherished and socially enforced, change in gender systems often is contested. In some countries, there are groups which seek to impose more stringent divisions between males and females than currently exist, while feminist movements seek to reduce or eradicate these divisions. 1 United Nations, 1995; United Nations, 2000; United Nations,

19 THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MAINSTREAMING GENDER Box 1.2 The Millennium Declaration, the Beijing Platform of Action, and CEDAW The Millennium Declaration encompasses the following goals: 1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger. This cannot be achieved without due attention to both women and men living in poverty. 2. Achieve universal primary education of both girls and boys. 3. Promote gender equality and empower women. This goal is intended to represent the Beijing Platform for Action. 4. Reduce child mortality. This cannot be achieved without better reproductive health services for women and the end of discriminatory behaviors that contribute to high levels of female child mortality in some parts of the world. 5. Improve maternal health. This cannot be achieved without reducing gender gaps in resources and access to health services. 6. Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases. In many countries, HIV/AIDS is spreading more rapidly among women than among men, which reflects women s lack of resources and opportunity. The burden of caring for HIV/AIDS victims and orphans also falls disproportionately on women. 7. Ensure environmental sustainability. Access to water is an important gender issue in many countries. The Beijing Platform has even broader goals: The goals of the Millennium Declaration are intended to further progress on the some of the 12 critical areas for action identified by the Beijing Platform of Action: women and poverty, education and training of women, women and health, violence against women, women and armed conflict, women and the economy, women in power and decisionmaking, institutional mechanisms for the advancement of women, human rights of women, women and the media, women and the environment, and the girl child. All UN member countries have endorsed the Beijing Platform for Action. CEDAW explicitly prohibits discrimination against women. 3

20 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK goal. Chapter 2 outlines the strategy for achieving this goal. Chapters 3, 4, and 5 address background issues relevant to the strategy. The Empirical Links of Gender to Poverty and Growth Gender inequality retards economic growth and poverty reduction. This is a key conclusion of a recent World Bank Policy Research Report, Engendering Development Through Gender Equality in Rights, Resources, and Voice, which considers the links among gender equality, development, and public policy. 2 As this report makes clear, there is growing evidence that several aspects of gender relations the gender-based division of labor, disparities between males and females in power and resources, and gender biases in rights and entitlements act to undermine economic growth and reduce the well-being of men, women, and children. Gender-based divisions of labor and gender inequalities also contribute to poverty. In the remainder of this section, we review in more detail the evidence linking gender to growth and poverty reduction. Gender Equality and Growth The primary pathways through which gender systems affect growth are the productivity of labor and the allocative efficiency of the economy, specifically through: investments in human capital (especially girls and women s education and health); investments in physical capital (especially women s access to capital or to the formal sector employment it creates); and 2 World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 2. The research report was supported in part by the governments of Norway and the Netherlands. 4

21 THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MAINSTREAMING GENDER the functioning of markets and institutions. 3 The linkages of gender to growth through human capital are pervasive and powerful. They involve both males and females, but women are typically at a disadvantage compared to men; hence the emphasis on improving women s rights, resources, and voice. Some of the most important links between gender and growth are through: Improved employment opportunities and higher incomes for women and their families. Educated, healthy women are more able to engage in productive activities, find formal sector employment, and earn higher incomes and greater returns to schooling than their counterparts who are uneducated or suffer from poor nutrition and health. Investments in female education and health therefore tend to increase the incomes of families, with benefits for men, women, and children. 4 These investments also help to increase a country s total economic output. The ability to adopt new technology and respond to economic change. Better-educated women are more able to profit from new forms of technology and the opportunities presented by economic change than are less educated women. 5 They are also better able to cope with economic shocks and downturns in economic cycles. Intergenerational effects on child schooling. Educated women give greater emphasis to schooling their children, thereby improving the productivity of the next generation. 6 Repro- 3 Greater gender equality and a less rigid or extreme gender-based division of labor promote growth in two ways: by raising the total level of productive capital in the society, and by specifically increasing female productive capital, which has important pro-growth effects. 4 World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 2; Schultz, World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 2; Foster and Rosenzweig, 1995; Foster and Rosenzweig, World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 2; Rosenzweig and Wolpin,

22 INTEGRATING GENDER INTO THE WORLD BANK S WORK ductive health services for women also have important intraand intergenerational effects on productivity and well-being, because early childbearing and frequent pregnancies can interrupt women s schooling, limit their ability to engage in incomegenerating activities, and force them to take daughters out of school to help with child care and household chores. Intergenerational effects on child health and survival. Female education improves child nutrition and children s health and survival, all factors that create a more intelligent, energetic, and productive younger generation. Educated mothers know more about healthy feeding practices, hygiene, and health care for example, the importance of immunizations and are more able to exercise this knowledge to promote their children s well-being. 7 Lowering the rate of population growth. Education especially female education slows population growth. In low-income countries, reduced population growth helps to increase saving and investment rates and also lowers the stress on natural resources and the environment. 8 In virtually every developing country, women who complete secondary school have significantly fewer children than do uneducated women. 9 Also, their children are born further apart from each other, a factor important for the wellbeing and productivity of both parents and children. Women s empowerment. Although education does not guarantee rights or power, it is a critical condition for empowering women and the evidence shows that empowered women are more able to participate in community and national decision- 7 World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 2; Jejeebhoy, 1995; Desai, Ahlburg, Kelley, and Mason, Jejeebhoy,

23 THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MAINSTREAMING GENDER making, are healthier, and are better able to protect themselves from HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections. 10 The links between female human capital and growth are by no means the entire story. As Engendering Development documents, gender relations also affect economic growth through access to physical capital and the functioning of markets and institutions. Some of the key links include: Time poverty created by poor infrastructure. In many settings especially in low-income countries and among the poor in all countries women work many more hours per day or week than men. This limits their ability to engage in incomegenerating activities and to participate in community or national decisionmaking. Because the gender-based division of labor extends to children, girls are often kept out of school to help with household work. In some settings, investments in infrastructure (roads and transport, water and sanitation, electricity) are important for reducing women s time poverty, which arises in part from their need to spend long hours gathering water or fuel. Access to productive assets and resources. In many societies, women are disadvantaged in gaining access to productive assets and resources, including land, the labor of other family members, the family s liquid assets, and financial services outside the household. Land titling is especially problematic. Women in all regions of the world are less likely to hold title to land than are men. 11 Where women are independent farmers, their lack of title to land discourages them from improving the land s productivity with negative consequences for the well-being of their families and makes it difficult for them to access finan- 10 World Bank, 2001a, Chapter World Bank, 2001a, Chapter 1. 7

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